Berserk
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Alysia,
You ask a good question. I doubt that "proof" is a legitimate possibility, though I am always eager to discover the merits of claims to have discovered proof. A more realistic goal is to have "convincing" paranormal experiences or to discover "persuasive" evidence. So I would rephrase your question this way: if I found more "persuasive" evidence for an afterlife, would that make my relationships more loving? That is an excellent question for any uf us to ask.
Before his conversion, St. Paul was a hitman for the Pharisees. He beat, jailed, and murdered Christians with a clear conscience. His encounter with the blazing light of the Risen Christ on the Damascus road transformed him into one of the most loving and effective agents of spiritual transformation who ever lived. The purity of his love was in part determined by the passion generated by His experience-based conviction that Jesus truly was the Son of God.
Most of us use words like "believe" and "convincing" in an inconsistent and often self-deluded way. For example, a promoter once hired a stunt man to push a wheel barrel over a wire spanning Niagara Falls. The stunt man asked if the promoter really believed he could perform this feat. The promoter replied, "Yes, I do; you have an excellent reputation as a daredevil." The stunt man than coyly replied, "Well, then, are you willing ro ride in the wheel barrel while I push it over the Falls?"
We imagine we are convinced by many claims, when in fact we merely feel a combination of doubt and attraction to those claims. Consider how few of the graduates of Bruce Moen's course post on this site. I imagine most of them believe in Bruce's method and may even have achieved the rudiments of initial success. But in the final analysis their skepticism has generally overcome their initial excitement, and so, they don't practice Bruce's method or post their retrieval experiences on this site. Does this discredit Bruce's mothod? Hardly. Consider the comparison with professed belief in the power of prayer.
Most Christians affirm their belief in prayer, but almost never show up to organized prayer meetings or devote significant time to mastering the art of prayer. Why not? Because their alleged "belief" in prayer is more than offset by their doubts about its efficacy. Spending a lot of time at prayer will seem like a waste of time to someone who unconsciously expects no exciting results. We domonstrate what really "convinces" us not by our professed belief system, but by our commitment of time and energy to those causes.
I want to be convinced that retrievals are possible through Bruce's method. But I am unconvinced by the many retrievals reported on this site. The expected verifications are not there. But if I were genuinely persuaded that I might be able to perform retrievals, that would be one of the most important insights of my life. And my day-to-day priorities would be altered accordingly. I would be offering daily posts on my retrievals and their verifications and would do everything possible to persuade others to master this skill. What could be more important than upgrading the spiritual plight of trapped discarnate spirits? Our passion for a worthy cause increases as a function ot the degree to which we are persuaded (1) that the cause is practical and noble and (2) that we can make a dramatic diifference in pursuiing it. The more focused our passion, the more likely it is that we will be consistently capable of loving communication.
But I should answer your question from another perspective. Many people deem it righteous to share the truth in love and then rationalize the recipient's intransigence with the thought, "Well, I shared the truth with them; what they do with it is their responsibility." To me, this atttitude is self-righteous rather than loving. We should instead ask ourselves, "What is the most likely result of my anticipated confrontation with this person?" Suppose I know a man who is cheating on his wife. What I would share with him about this, if anything, would not just be based on my convictions about fidelity, but on my intuition as to whether this man is likely to make better decisions as a result of my communication. The issue of whether my dialogue partner likes me is a matter of ego, not uf love. So I am willing to confront if I anticipate a positive result.
I am confrontational on this site with posters I perceive as arrogant or close-minded because I have found by experience that this approach has the best chance of raising consciousness. Past posters who have continued their E-mail dialogue with me on their spiritual journey are eloquent testimony to this fact. What makes communication loving is its real intention, not the warm fuzzies in which it is framed. That said, one must always be alert for ways to make one's communication more genuinely loving.
Don
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